Warner v. Lerner

693 A.2d 394, 115 Md. App. 428, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 7, 1997
Docket1368, Sept.Term, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 693 A.2d 394 (Warner v. Lerner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. Lerner, 693 A.2d 394, 115 Md. App. 428, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 78 (Md. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

THIEME, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City (Mitchell, J.) dismissing appellant’s claim that his rights under Maryland’s Confidentiality of Records Act were violated by appellee. We shall affirm the circuit court.

Facts

In a claim unrelated to this appeal, Leo Kelly, Jr., brought an action alleging medical malpractice on the part of appellee, Dr. Brad Lerner. Upon the parties’ joint consent to submit the claim to binding arbitration, the matter proceeded in that fashion.

Plaintiffs expert, Dr. Horst Schirmer, opined that Dr. Brad Lerner breached standards of care by performing on Kelly an operation known as a transurethral resection of the prostate (“TURP”). On cross-examination, Lerner’s counsel sought to impeach Schirmer by introducing a copy of a pathology report *430 that indicated that Dr. Schirmer had performed the same kind of surgery under conditions nearly identical to those that he alleged constituted a breach of care on the part of Lerner. The subject of that pathology report was appellant William Warner.

Warner filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City alleging that a violation of the Confidentiality of Records. Act, as set forth in Maryland Code Ann., Health General Article § 3-401 et seq. (“the Act”), had resulted from Lerner’s improper taking and using Warner’s medical records without his prior consent.

Lerner filed a motion to dismiss. In his ruling from the bench, Judge Mitchell stated:

We are troubled here, as we intimated by our questions, that in this society, where so much of our interests, our knowledge, [and] our records are subject to review without our being aware of it, that an uninterested person, clothed only with the mantle of a Doctor of Medicine degree or licensure, can rummage through the records of a hospital and obtain information about patients.
We are troubled that no effort was made to subpoena the records and give notice to the patient that his records were being made public. We are troubled that the individual patient did not have free opportunity to contest the disclosure of his records and that a court of competent jurisdiction was not afforded an opportunity to consider the issue and perhaps craft a protective order.
The statute provides that any provider may obtain any record of any patient if those records will assist in the defense of a lawsuit against that health care provider. We obviously are paraphrasing.
Despite this Court’s quite obvious discomfort, maybe even displeasure, or its severe reservations regarding just what was intended by the general assembly, the language of the statute is clear, and we must give meaning to those words as those words were set forth by that deliberative body. *431 We will grant the motion to dismiss this case, because the legislature, by their language, gave the defendant the opportunity to obtain this information and use it to defend a lawsuit that everyone acknowledges was pending against him.
We hope, and in fact urge, that the legislature reexamine this issue because of the potential for abuse.

(Emphasis supplied.)

Appellant presents the following issue, as paraphrased, for this Court’s review:

Whether Lerner’s taking and disclosure of Warner’s medical records was permitted under the Act.

DISCUSSION

I. Standard of Review

Upon appeal from the granting of a motion to dismiss filed under Maryland Rule 2 — 322(b)(2), an appellate court must assume the truth of all well-pleaded relevant and material facts in the complaint, as well as all inferences that can reasonably be drawn therefrom. Odyniec v. Schneider, 322 Md. 520, 525, 588 A.2d 786 (1991). Dismissal is proper only if the alleged facts and permissible inferences, so viewed, would nonetheless fail to afford relief to the plaintiff if proven. Morris v. Osmose Wood Preserving, 340 Md. 519, 531, 667 A.2d 624 (1995); Faya v. Almaraz, 329 Md. 435, 443, 620 A.2d 327 (1993).

II. The Act

The genesis of the Act occurred during the 1990 session of the General Assembly as Senate Bill 584. Sponsored by five senators, particularly Senator Paula Hollinger, chair of the health subcommittee, SB 584 was enacted to provide for the confidentiality of medical records, to establish clear and certain rules for the disclosure of medical records, and generally to bolster the privacy rights of patients. The legislature *432 recognized that, because of the personal and sensitive nature of one’s medical records, a patient might experience emotional and financial harm if his medical records are improperly used or disclosed. It was further desired that the Act would enable health care providers to retain the full trust and confidence of their patients.

The resultant codification of this legislative initiative now reads, in pertinent part:

§ 4-305 Disclosures without authorization of person in interest — In general.
(b) Permitted Disclosure. — A health care provider may disclose a medical record without the authorization of a person in interest: 1
(l)(ii) To the provider’s legal counsel regarding only the information in the medical records that relates to the subject matter of the representation; or
(iii) To any provider’s insurer or legal counsel, or the authorized employees or agents of a provider’s insurer or legal counsel, or the authorized employees or agents of a provider’s insurer or legal counsel, for the sole purpose of handling a potential or actual claim against any provider. (Emphasis supplied.)

The Floor Report of SB 584 further summarizes the circumstances under which a permissive disclosure of a patient’s medical records is available. “These persons and entities include: 1) a provider’s authorized employees, agents, or consultants for the purpose of offering, providing, evaluating, or seeking payment for health care to patients; 2) a provider’s legal counsel.... ” While it is clear the first item generally relates to medical treatment, and the payment therefor, the second item can be construed quite broadly as allowing a *433 provider’s legal counsel to have wholesale access to medical records in the defense of a pending claim.

This is the focus of our concern.

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Bluebook (online)
693 A.2d 394, 115 Md. App. 428, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-lerner-mdctspecapp-1997.